Those instructions work for installing Mandriva Linux. Kubuntu/LMCE does not have either an alt0/all.rdz/etc or use lilo (it uses grub instead).

Does anyone have actual instructions for installing 0710b2 from a DVD ISO file, that they've actually tested to work?

Failing that, can I just mount the ISO file as a loopback, delete the PlutoMD-[amd64,i386].tar.bz2 file that I'm not using, unmount the ISO file, and burn it to a single-layer DVD that's no longer too big to fit?

I'm no testing, just i ask in forum this possibility.I not done mount ISO file as a loopback for delete plutoMD.Thanks.

I can get Myth working under KDE, but not under LMCE, where I just get a black screen and eventually get told Myth is having a problem and do I want to reset the backend. It seems that all the hardware works - the problem is that Appserver (device #15) does not start up. When LMCE is starting, the log shows a timeout waiting for Appserver to be registered, and eventually I get a black screen saying not all devices started up.

I'd like to get to the bottom of this - any ideas where I can find some relevant logs to point me in the right direction? The Wiki is very sparse on info for Appserver.

Best Regards,Richard.

Problem solved, courtesy of Hodge.Turned out that Appserver needs a sound mixer device to work with, and my soundcard (Audigy Value) does not have one. Installation of a software mixer had my system up and running smoothly. Still don't have sound working (I had sound before installing the software mixer), but I don't see that as a problem - it's just a chance of configuring the software mixer properly, or putting in a soundcard with a hardware mixer.

Turned out that Appserver needs a sound mixer device to work with, and my soundcard (Audigy Value) does not have one. Installation of a software mixer had my system up and running smoothly. Still don't have sound working (I had sound before installing the software mixer)

Would you report that bug in Mantis? The installer should detect whether the mixer exists, and install one if it doesn't. And why the AppServer is dependent on a sound mixer is a mystery to me.

if you look at the code for the AppServer, it will become clear, particularly that the app server deals with allocating and launching external applications from the orbiter, and tries to control the sound card so that we don't have situations where multiple programs try to exclusively grab the soundcard. This is vastly oversimplified, but that's the reason why the App server controls the sound card.. not saying it's perfect...but that's the way it is, now.

if you look at the code for the AppServer, it will become clear, particularly that the app server deals with allocating and launching external applications from the orbiter, and tries to control the sound card so that we don't have situations where multiple programs try to exclusively grab the soundcard. This is vastly oversimplified, but that's the reason why the App server controls the sound card.. not saying it's perfect...but that's the way it is, now.

That logic would make some sense, on a MD/Hybrid. If anything, the AppServer should block running apps on a host that is just a Core (not also a MD).

There's practically no AppServer docs. Is it a completely custom app, or is it related to any other app servers? Other than the code, is there any other discussion of how it works?

if you look at the code for the AppServer, it will become clear, particularly that the app server deals with allocating and launching external applications from the orbiter, and tries to control the sound card so that we don't have situations where multiple programs try to exclusively grab the soundcard. This is vastly oversimplified, but that's the reason why the App server controls the sound card.. not saying it's perfect...but that's the way it is, now.

Turned out that Appserver needs a sound mixer device to work with, and my soundcard (Audigy Value) does not have one. Installation of a software mixer had my system up and running smoothly. Still don't have sound working (I had sound before installing the software mixer)

Would you report that bug in Mantis? The installer should detect whether the mixer exists, and install one if it doesn't. And why the AppServer is dependent on a sound mixer is a mystery to me.

Everything is done as the root user, and you will need to replace /dev/sdaX and /dev/sdaY with the partitions you created or want to use. You will also need to configure a bootloader to start your partition, I used the existing GRUB install on another partititon and added extra targets to its /boot/grub/menu.lst.

No guarantees that this will give you a properly working system, but so far everything seems to work fine for me.

Here is how I installed the beta2 ISO manually to a partition, without burning a DVD.

Thanks - that procedure makes sense, and is certainly a little different from the one I'm using that's failing, in what seems like the relevant places. Especially since the change I made to my instructions, adding

title ISO image on sda3 (LMCE v0710b2)kernel (hd0,2)/casper/vmlinuz root=/dev/sda3 BOOTMEDIA=cdinitrd (hd0,2)/casper/initrd.gzbootbooted OK, except that the partition somehow was mounted on a dir called "/root", and booting halted in (initramfs) with a busybox shell and (I assume initramfs) stuff in /. When I changed it to "root=(hd0,2)/dev/sda3", I got a "init: /init 157 Error divide by zero" kernel panic when it tried to mount the root filesystem. Kind of a showstopper.

Would you report that bug in Mantis? The installer should detect whether the mixer exists, and install one if it doesn't. And why the AppServer is dependent on a sound mixer is a mystery to me.

I'm going through the process of getting the source code to have a look at it, but I doubt it is dependant on it. More likely it is setting the sound volume or something like that, and not checking beforehand whether it exists. Bad things happen in code when you do something to a non-existant object.

I can not ID or play disc on my disc changer after installing the 0710 beta

Anyone else seeing this.

I haven't installed the beta yet, but this makes me glad I haven't...

My wife and kids (not to mention the kids that come to my house for the daycare) would have a fit if they couldn't access the movies.

The (overdue) first public beta of something as complex as LMCE is not for the wife and kids (unless they're beta testers, too). But it's worth installing on something expendable so you can offer feedback to speed the delivery of the release for them, so the old annyoing bugs are gone faster.